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The Dartmouth
September 20, 2024 | Latest Issue
The Dartmouth
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News

Events recognize sexual assault

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With the sponsorship of 31 campus organizations, the fifth annual Sexual Assault and Awareness week kicks off today with a mock Committee on Standards hearing and culminates Thursday night with a "Take Back the Night March." "The general purpose of this week is education and to raise awareness about sexual assault and how it affects people," said Yun Chung '97, who served on the committee that planned the week's events.


News

'95s battle for Council presidency

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One of the more heated battles in this spring's elections is the race for 1995 class president, which pits two-year incumbent Tim Rodenberger against current vice president Alyse Kornfeld. Rodenberger, who said he has tried to increase the Class Council's role on campus the last two years, said he would like to be re-elected so he can see his work to completion. "I've been building up the Class Councils - gaining resources, gaining respect," he said.


Arts

Festival of student performances draws heavy crowds

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Hundreds of students flocked to the Hopkins Center Saturday night for the second annual "Rock the Hop," a six-hour extravaganza of student performances and artistic displays. All throughout the center there were singers belting and crooning, a capella groups indulging in antics, light shows and displays dazzling the crowds, poets and actors reciting to enchanted audiences and of course, hordes of students milling around and taking it all in. "I thought it was great.



News

Shafer dead at 71

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Chemistry Professor emeritus Paul "Dick" Shafer died Wednesday of cardiac arrest at the Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center.



News

Politicized SA helps Class Councils

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Critics claim the Student Assembly has done nothing this year except waste its time engaging in meaningless political bantering. But the political wrangling in the Assembly has at least one positive repercussion: the growth of the Class Councils. While Assembly members have debated impeaching their president, the four councils have been planning more activities, becoming more involved in policy matters and scoring a large increase in College funding. Senior Class President Dan Garodnick said the increasing presence of the Class Councils is directly tied to the public perception of the Assembly. "I think there's an increasingly negative perception of Student Assembly, and students tend to look to the Class Councils more for their representation," Garodnick said. As the councils have become more involved on campus, people have begun to take notice - Assembly presidential candidates this year have pledged to better integrate the Assembly and the councils. The Class Councils have three main functions: to sponsor and organize activities, to handle policy matters pertaining to their class and to try to create unity and class spirit. Class leaders say the councils are the perfect organizations for handling issues that relate to a specific class.



Opinion

Moore for President

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The decision students make in tomorrow's elections will speak volumes on what they value most in their years here and what they believe a better community should be. Much of the rhetoric we have heard from this year's candidates expounds on the virtue of student services.


Sports

Men's tennis evens record at 1-1

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The men's tennis team returned to Hanover Saturday night with a 1-1 Ivy League record after losing a close match 4-3 against Columbia University Friday afternoon and retaliating against the University of Pennsylvania in a 5-2 route Saturday. "We knew the match against Columbia would be tough," Holden Spaht '96 said.



News

Holocaust remembered

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Dartmouth's Hillel, the College's Jewish students' organization, held a series of events this weekend to recognize Yom Ha Shoah, the commemoration of the six million Jews killed in the Holocaust. Mike Hauser '95 and Gila Ackerman '94 organized a reading of names of some of those killed in the Holocaust to begin Yom Ha Shoah events.


Sports

Pelton is at home on the court?

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He smiles when he gets on the court, the administrative worries of the day replaced by the need to stretch out muscles tense from hours sitting at a desk and endless committee meetings. "You're too tight Lee, you're wound up like a spring," a fellow player who comes over to help him stretch his 6-foot-3 frame says. Here the rhythmic clicking of computer keys in his Parkhurst office is replaced by the high-pitched squeaking of sneakers and the discordant clang of basketballs hitting the rim. The other players know him simply as "Lee," and he looks more comfortable in his green tank-top and blue gym shorts than in his suit and tie. As the minutes tick by, the administrative troubles melt away, replaced by the quizzical frown of a man who cannot determine why his shots are not falling today. Dean of the College Lee Pelton looks at home. The former high school basketball player says he tries to hit the hardwood at least two or three times a week.


News

Computer consciousness?

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World renowned author Robert Penrose gave the keynote address for a day-long conference Saturday in a filled-to-capacity Cook Auditorium, discussing the possibility of a conscious computer. The conference, titled "Of Apples and Origins: Stories of Life on Earth," was sponsored by the College and the New Hampshire Humanities Council. Penrose is the author of the 1989 book "The Emperor's New Mind," which fueled public interest in the interrelationship between artificial intelligence and the human mind. Among Penrose's major contentions is that computers will never be able to think as humans do. Daniel Dennett, director of the Center for Cognitive Studies at Tufts University and author of the book "Consciousness Explained," presented the opposing viewpoint at the conference, contending that the creation of a conscious computer will be "the inevitable culmination of scientific advances that have gradually demystified and unified the material world." In addition to their speeches and workshops, Penrose and Dennett participated in a round-table discussion with Colin McGinn, a philosophy professor at Rutgers University, in New Jersey, and author of "The Problem of Consciousness." The speakers advanced their theories and predictions regarding the possibility of consciousness through artificial intelligence in a debate mediated by Eric Chaisson of the Wright Center for Science Education at Tufts University. Chaisson empathized with the audience and set a light tone for the debate when he began the discussion by saying he was confused, and asking the speakers if they were confused as well. "The very fact that the mind leads us to truths that are not computable convinces me that a computer can never duplicate the mind," Penrose said in a news release. "It could well be that the way the universe actually operates is according to some non-computable procedure," Penrose said in the discussion. To demonstrate the ambiguity in determining consciousness, Dennett cited similarities in the physical construction of the human mind and the nervous system of a cockroach and asked "Is the brain of a cockroach non-computable?" Penrose responded that he did not know.


News

Softball dominates

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Dartmouth Softball dominated both games of a doubleheader this weekend against Amherst College, scoring 9-2 and 7-1 victories. Ericka Lee '95 struck out six Amherst batters for the day as she pitched a six hitter in the first game and two hitter in the second game. The Big Green attack also helped in Lee's effort with Co-Captain Jen Pitts '95 hitting two for five and freshmen Lauren McQuade and Jodi Priselac tallying two hits each in the victory. Amherst took an early lead in the first contest with two runs in the third, but Dartmouth rebounded with nine runs in the four innings. In the second game, pinch hitter Kelly Goodwin '97 began the Dartmouth scoring with a hit that put her in position to score the tying run off of a single by Pitts.


Opinion

Review Should Not Be Factor In Assembly Race

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To the Editor: This letter is in response to Claire Unis' column "For the Next Assembly President," (April 8), and her misguided comments about certain Student Assembly presidential candidates. In her column, Unis attempts to ridicule and even dismiss, with the notable exception of those of Danielle Moore, the ideas of all of the Assembly Presidential candidates, but she especially attacks those of Jeremy Katz. Katz, who has served the student body as a judge on the Committee on Standards, an Assembly member, and SAE President, was one of the few Assembly presidential candidates that presented clear ideas for the benefit of the Dartmouth community, as opposed to generalities.